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Young Influencer Turned Down Million Dollar Role Over Single Nude Scene

Jack Neel · "We Never Wanted This!" Savannah Stone on Why Modern Women Are So Unhappy in 2026 | Jack Neel · May 31, 2026
Young Influencer Turned Down Million Dollar Role Over Single Nude Scene
Jack Neel
Jack Neel
"We Never Wanted This!" Savannah Stone on Why Modern Women Are So Unhappy in 2026 | Jack Neel
"I was told that my final essay was going to be on white privilege. I said no, I'm not writing it and I took a zero on the final essay. It was million-dollar pay. There's basically a nude scene in one of them. I was like, if my father can't watch something that I do for work, I'm not doing it."
Stone recounts being offered a million-dollar film role alongside recognizable stars at age 17-18, but rejecting it because it required a topless scene. The producer pressured her, saying it would launch her career, but she maintained her values. She also previously refused to write a college essay on white privilege, taking a zero instead.

About this episode

Host Jack Neal interviews 20-year-old anti-feminist influencer Savannah Faith Stone, who left a promising modeling and acting career to get married at 18 and promote traditional values. Stone argues feminism was never a grassroots movement but an elite-funded operation by families including the Vanderbilts and Rothschilds, claiming only 4% of Massachusetts women actually wanted suffrage. She reveals that Gloria Steinem's Ms. Magazine received CIA funding and featured Hindu goddess Kali symbolizing male destruction on its 1972 cover. Stone details her personal journey from competitive beauty pageants starting at age 13 through turning down a million-dollar film role because it required nudity, ultimately choosing marriage and faith over Hollywood. She makes controversial claims about early feminists practicing witchcraft and sex magic, and argues modern feminism has led to declining female happiness, the inability to define womanhood, and men competing in women's spaces. Stone discusses her traditional marriage philosophy including wifely submission, never refusing sex, and letting her husband make household decisions. She warns young women about human trafficking schemes disguised as modeling opportunities and criticizes the entertainment industry's moral compromises. The conversation explores dating dynamics, social media's impact on relationships, consumerism targeting women, and why she believes the anti-suffragist movement was larger but hidden from history. Stone argues women are happiest as married mothers and that career-focused feminism has enslaved rather than freed women.

Key takeaways

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